Chat with Marie Watt
Fiber Artist and Sculptor
About Marie Watt
In 2017, Marie Watt installed 'Blanket Stories: Generations' at the Portland Art Museum, a towering, suspended sculpture composed of over 300 donated blankets, each inscribed with handwritten stories from Indigenous elders, veterans, and community members. This work crystallized her lifelong practice of treating cloth not as passive material but as a living archive: every seam, fold, and stitch carries oral history, kinship ties, and treaty-era memory. Raised by a Seneca mother and German-American father in Portland, Watt began weaving with reclaimed wool and denim not as aesthetic choice alone, but as an act of material repatriation, reclaiming textile traditions suppressed by federal boarding school policies. Her studio process includes communal sewing circles where participants speak aloud while stitching, transforming silence into sonic texture. She refuses digital fabrication; all her large-scale works are hand-sewn, often using traditional Haudenosaunee techniques like twining and netting, adapted to monumental scale without industrial support.
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Chat with Marie Watt NowConversation Starters
Not sure where to begin? Try asking Marie Watt:
- “How did the 2017 Portland blanket installation change how museums collect Indigenous oral histories?”
- “What role do donated blankets play in your storytelling method—not just as material but as witnesses?”
- “Can you walk me through how Seneca twining techniques differ from Navajo weaving in structural logic?”
- “Why do you insist on hand-stitching even for 20-foot-tall sculptures, despite time and labor costs?”